Random Thoughts X: Impromptu Interpretations

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Maybe the 7-year rule is intended to provide more time/ opportunity for any still-enlisted peers of the SecDef-nominee to also move up/ muster out, thus reducing the potential for nepotism/ cronyism/ score-settling between the (new) civilian controller and the (existing) military command-staff...?
Yes, that's probably a useful aspect of that rule, removing potential conflicts of interest.

Generally speaking, the principle (in the US) of civilian control of the military comes out of the fact that the military was how European kings and queens maintained control of the population, and the Founding Fathers wanted to prevent that. Some of them even thought we shouldn't have a standing army at all, and that the militia was a suitable military force for most purposes, and could be forged into a formal uniformed army if the fit really hit the shan. I think that's partly where the American veneration of the "militia" today comes from: Whereas the European leaders of the 18th Century viewed the militia as undisciplined rabble, American philosophers of the day envisioned the militia as the invested citizenry. The fear was that career military men would view themselves as apart from, or even above, the citizenry. iirc, George Washington was reluctant to be President, and stepped down voluntarily because he didn't want anyone to get the idea that electing a military man should be considered normal (he also didn't want anyone thinking that Presidents should be in office for life). I guess I don't know how people in the military view their relationship to civilians, today. There's been a lot said and written in the last decade or two about how few Americans serve in the military, or even have a friend or a relative who does, which risks leaving civilians disconnected from the military; I don't think I've seen anything about the reverse.

I think there also is or has been a concern that military men might be more inclined to see military force as appropriate or applicable. "Give a man hammer..." But it's been our civilian leadership that keeps throwing our military into stupid war after stupid war. Who knows, if military men had a real say in it, maybe the US would get into fewer wars than we do. After all, it was Eisenhower, a military man, who resisted sending our troops overseas unless it was really necessary, and who tried to warn us about the creeping influence of military weapons manufacturers, and it doesn't seem like many people listened to him. Not that Eisenhower was some kind of benevolent oracle. He was the one who approved of overthrowing Mossadeq. I'm just sayin' the concern that a military man might be quicker on the draw than a civilian doesn't seem to bear up to scrutiny.
 
dystopian movies keep getting more and more boring because there's very little bad stuff left that hasn't actually happened
 
The other day, someone on the radio was talking about the plethora of accents around New Orleans, and he mentioned that some folks there sound like they're from Brooklyn, and I thought "get the f outta here." So now I'm listening to James McBride being interviewed on the radio, and at first I was 1000% sure that it was Wendell Pierce. McBride is from Brooklyn; Pierce is from New Orleans.
 
I heard some gossip a month ago that here in America we speak the original English language (1770s), and Britain speaks the snobby sounding version because it became a fad around 1800 to do so and it really caught fire.:crazyeye:
It penetrated Boston too, but that's as far as it got.
 
Isn’t it about time we dropped the flag lapel pin?
How date you insult our veterans, disrespect our troops, and hate America!
 
How date you insult our veterans, disrespect our troops, and hate America!
Maybe I’ve been out of the country for too long, but does that even work anymore? It feels so 2000’s to me, like getting chewed out by Simon Cowell.

What are you gonna do about it, remove me from your top friends on your MySpace account?
 
@amadeus I'll also take my songs off Napster so you can't listen to them!
 
I heard some gossip a month ago that here in America we speak the original English language (1770s), and Britain speaks the snobby sounding version because it became a fad around 1800 to do so and it really caught fire.:crazyeye:
It penetrated Boston too, but that's as far as it got.

Now if only there was only one accent each in the UK and the UK, with no changes whatsoever in the last 250 years, and that might even be worth investigating...
 
Please allow me to formally register my delight at the implantation of the Christmas smileys. Thank you, Thunderfall.
 
Please allow me to formally register my delight at the implantation of the Christmas smileys. Thank you, Thunderfall.
So you've had a change of heart about them? 'Cause knowing your antipathy to Santa hat smileys, I am confused by your Santa hat avatar.
 
Now if only there was only one accent each in the UK and the UK, with no changes whatsoever in the last 250 years, and that might even be worth investigating...
I thought there were only three accents:
Drunk as a lord, [incomprehensible], and aggressively middle class.

"It turns out Britain has trash people too!"
 
I heard some gossip a month ago that here in America we speak the original English language (1770s), and Britain speaks the snobby sounding version because it became a fad around 1800 to do so and it really caught fire.:crazyeye:
It penetrated Boston too, but that's as far as it got.

So, you're saying you speak a primitive backwards form of the language? How appropriate...:p
 
I heard some gossip a month ago that here in America we speak the original English language (1770s), and Britain speaks the snobby sounding version because it became a fad around 1800 to do so and it really caught fire.:crazyeye:
It penetrated Boston too, but that's as far as it got.
There's a seed of truth, in that American English dialects are on the whole more conservative than those in Britain, but both are a fair distance away from where they would have been in the 1770s. The most conservative examples of each are Appalachian dialects and West Country dialects, respectively, both of which are considered very atypical of each country.
 
So you've had a change of heart about them? 'Cause knowing your antipathy to Santa hat smileys, I am confused by your Santa hat avatar.
I am being deadpan for sarcastic effect, like the character Daria, depicted in my avatar, to the left of this post. (<--)

Which is why I am using no exclamation or interrogation marks right now. Can you see it.
 
At the beginning of 2020, just having turned 50, I got a colonoscopy. Little did I realize, things would be going downhill from there.
 
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